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Phylum Mollusca
1. Phylum Mollusca
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7. Molluscan diversity
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9.
Adapted from Lesser Known ProtostomePhyla. SICB 2001. J.R. Garey.
Possess trochophore larvae
Mollusca and Annelida are closely allied phyla
Porifera
Cnidaria
Ctenophora
Platyhelminthes
Gastrotricha
Gnathostomulida
Cycliophora
Rotifera
Annelida
Mollusca
Sipuncula
Nemertea
Bryozoa
Brachiopoda
Phoronida
Arthropoda
Onychophora
Tardigrada
Nematomorpha
Nematoda
Priapulida
Kinorhyncha
Loricifera
Echinodermata
Hemichordata
Chordata
10. 93,000 species of described molluscs (extant) + 70,000 more species from fossil record
ArthropodaMollusca
Chordata
Platyhelminthes
Nematoda
Annelida
Porifera
Echinodermata
Other
Sarcomastigophora
Apicomplex
Ciliophora
11. Defining characteristics of Mollusca
• Bilateral symmetry, cephalization• Coelom (around heart)
• Mantle
– draped over viscera
– secretes shell
Complete digestive tract, Radula
Trochophore larvae (often also veliger larvae)
Locomotion by muscular foot
Heart, liver, gills (ctenidia), kidney
12.
Phylum.Mollusca
Aplacophora
Class. Polyplacophora
Class. Monoplacophora
Class. Gastropoda
Class. Cephalopoda
Class. Bivalvia
Class. Scaphopoda
Class.
13.
AplacophoraPolyplacophora
Bivalvia
Scaphopoda
14. Mollusc origins?
Platyhelminthe-like ancestor withspicules on dorsal surface, cilia on
ventral surface, and dorsoventral
musculature.
15. Mollusc origins?
Spicules fuse to form dorsal shell,cilia on ventral surface, and
dorsoventral musculature.
16. Mollusc origins?
Spicules fuse to form dorsal shell, ciliaon ventral surface, dorsoventral
musculature, gonads and excretory
pores in mantle cavity
17. Mollusc origins?
Spicules fuse to form dorsal shell, cilia onventral surface, dorsoventral
musculature, gonads, excretory pores, and
ctenidia, in mantle cavity.
18. HAM: Hypothetical ancestral mollusc
Pericardial cavityMetanephridium
Mantle cavity
Gonad
Ctenidium
Radula
Stomach and digestive gland
Foot
19. Dorsal mantle covers the visceral mass.
Secretesthe shell
20. Mollusc shell
PeriostracumPrismatic layer
Nacreous layer
Mantle epithelium
Mantle lobes
21. Pearl formation
PeriostracumPrismatic layer
Nacreous layer
Developing pearl
Epithelium
22. Ctenidium (Respiration)
23. Ctenidium (gill)
Interlamellarjunctions
Exhalent
water
Ostium
Blood vessel
Frontal
cilia
24. Paired ventral nerve cords
25. Complete digestive system
26. Radula
27. Radula
28. Aplacophora
Gill foldsMouth
Pedal pit
Pedal groove
29. Class Aplacophora
• 320 spp, all marine• No fossil record (!) & poorly studied
• Calcareous spines and scales in epidermis (no
true shell)
• Radula used for grasping
• Burrow in the substrate
• Eat cnidarians
30. Polyplacophora
31. Polyplacophora
MouthMantle cavity
Ctenidium
Foot
Anus
32. Polyplacophora
Digestivegland
Mouth
Stomach
Gonad
Pericardial cavity
Nephridium
Anus
33. Polyplacophora
The “chitons”
800 spp, marine
Typically, shell = 8 dorsal plates
Ctenidia use counter-current gas exchange
Commonly encountered in the intertidal zone
34.
Class Gastropoda• Single external shell
• Radula for scraping
food
• Moves in wave like
contractions through
slime
• Can be hermaphrodites,
though commonly not
• Ex) Snails, slugs
35.
Class Gastropoda• Snails live on land or in fresh or salt water
– They have eyes on tentacles on their head
• Slugs live on land and Sea Slugs (a.k.a.
nudibranches) live in the ocean
– Slugs do not have shells
– Have exchange of oxygen (diffusion) across their
entire body
36.
Gastropoda• More active than mono and polyplacophorans
– Highly cephalized: tentacles, eyes
• Gonochoristic
• Veliger larva (an advanced version of the
trochophore larva)
37.
Class Gastropoda• Three evolutionary innovations occurred among the gastropods:
changes in the shell, increased development of the head, the
embryonic process of torsion
1. Changes in the Shell
• The shell became higher and
conical with a reduced aperture
• The shell also became coiled
• Shells initially were planospiral
- bilaterally symmetrical shell
with the whorls lying in the same
plane
• Modern day shells are
asymmetrical - each successive
coil is a little outside and offset a
little above the one below
38.
Shell• Most have a single,
spiraled shell and can
move the entire head
and foot into this
shell for protection.
• Also, many
gastropods have a
hardened plate called
the operculum on
the back of the foot
that plugs the shell
aperture when the
body is withdrawn
39.
Nutrition• Many gastropods are herbivores and use their radula scrap algae
from surfaces of rocks
• Some gastropods are active predators and in these the radula is often
highly modified, e.g., as a drill (oyster drills) or harpoon (venomous
gastropods)
Cone snail
40.
Respiration• Aquatic gastropods possess gills for respiration
• Terrestrial gastropods obtain oxygen via a well vascularized
mantle
Vascularized
mantle
gills
41.
Pulmonata• Highly vascularized mantle for gas exchange
(lung)
• 17,000 spp: slugs, pond snails
42.
Sea Slugs!43.
Sea Slugs!44.
Mollusks (Phylum Mollusca)Bivalvia – clam:
two valves, connected by dorsal hinge
ligament
adductor muscles (used by living clam to close
the shell)
gills in mantle cavity
wedgelike foot
45.
Class Bivalvia – Two Shells• Three layers make up the shell of a bivalve
– Inner most protects the body of the animal
– Middle layer strengthens the shell with calcium
carbonate
– Outer layer protects against acid in the water
46.
Class Bivalvia• Shells divided into 2 equal halves or
valves
• Mantle tissue is indented in the anteriorposterior margins, with 2 centers of
calcification
• Shells joined at the dorsal midline by a
non calcified protein ligaments called the
hinge
47.
Movement of the Ventilating Currents48.
Adaptive Radiation of Bivalves49.
Reproduction• Most are dioecious
• Marine forms usually
produce free swimming
trochophore and veliger
larvae
• Many of the freshwater
bivalves have a different life
history pattern; produce
larvae called glochidia
• Glochidia are housed in the
outer gills; they use there
outer gill as a brood camber marsupium
• When the glochidia are
released they parasitize the
fins and gills of fishes
50.
Mollusks (Phylum Mollusca):
Cephalopoda – squid:
muscular foot with tentacles (with suction
discs)
thick mantle but no external shell (true for
most cephalopods)
excurrent siphon (for jet propulsion)
large eyes
51.
Class Cephalopoda• Means “head foot”
• Includes octopuses, squids,
cuttlefishes and chambered
nautiluses
• Free swimming and
predatory
• Tentacles with suction cups
to grasp prey
• Have jaws called beaks to
destroy their prey
• Has the largest invertebrate
brain
52.
Cephalopods• Can learn to perform
tasks
• Has complex eyes
• Closed circulatory
system
• Are sexual - internal
• Have ink to confuse
predators
53.
CephalopodaSwift, agile carnivores
Closed circulatory system, 2 hearts
Separate sexes
Foot modified to form arms, tentacles, siphon
Brain, cranium, complex image-forming eye
700 extant spp, 10,000 extinct spp
Arose from limpet-like monoplacophorans
Ergo, ventral became function anterior, etc
54.
Cephalopods55.
Cephalopoda• Endocochleate cephalopds
– Reduce internal shell, or shell absent
– Squids, cuttlefish, octopi
56.
LocomotionCephalopods are excellent swimmers: streamlined body;
tentacles and fins as stabilizers
• Swim by means of jet propulsion, using the highly modified
muscular mantle and the siphon
– By relaxing the mantle the mantle cavity is expanded and water can be
drawn in
– By contracting the mantle water can be forced out of the mantle cavity by
means of the small siphonal opening
57.
Feeding• Cephalopods are carnivores
• Have a powerful parrot like beak that is used to tear prey apart.
• They also have a powerful radula
• In some of the octopuses the salivary glands are modified poison
glands
58.
Other General Features• For protection, they possess an ink
sacs
• Cephalopods have well-developed
sense organs, including a camera type
eye
• Some have well-developed brains and
show a remarkable capacity for
learning.
• Cephalopods are the only molluscan
class with a closed circulatory system
59.
60.
61.
62.
63.
CephalopodaPosterior surface
Right
Ventral
Dorsal
Left
64.
TentacleArm
Funnel (siphon)
Collar
Eye
Fin
65.
Shell (Pen)Systemic
heart
Branchial heart
Ctenidium
Funnel
Hectocotylus (sperm-bearing arm in males)
Reproduction: trochophore and veliger are bypassed and hatch into planktonic juveniles
66.
eyeOptic lobe
Buccal ganglia
Cerebral ganglion
statocyst
esophagus
Brachial nerves
Brain is surrounded by a cranium
67.
Cephalopod eyeIris
Retina
Optic nerves
Lens
Cornea
68.
69.
Giant optopus70.
Examples of Cephalopods• Close-up view of an unknown species
of bathypelagic squid encountered by
ROV Tiburon at 3,380 meters depth off
the coast of Oahu.
• This animal was estimated to be four
to five meters in length.
• Different from other squids in that
their eight arms and two tentacles are
roughly equal in length and thickness.
• A giant squid (3.15-metre-long) has
netted off the UK coast; first time in
15 years.
• The squid, believed to be female and
three years old, did not survive being
brought to the surface.
71.
The Mimic Octopus72.
Cephalopoda• Ectocochleate cephalopods
– Have external shell with internally subdivisions
used for buoyancy control
– This ancestral group is almost completely extinct
– E.g. Nautilus
73.
74.
Nautilus is the only cephalopod with an externalshell and lacking chromatophores
Chromatophores (color cells)
Iridocytes (reflective cells)
- Millions of these allow rapid changes in color,
polarized signals
- Also have photophores for bioluminescence
Cephalopods except Nautilus have ink sac